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STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
HITT & LOVfRY UT .
COLUMBIA, Ml. 652' Jl
ST. 12- 5-- 74 .
" See story, Page 6
70lli Year - No. 261 ;, Morning! It's Saturday July 22 1 978 14 Pages 1 5 Cents , -
Who uses
6pot, 9 6coke9
in capital?
Bourne episode has
people wondering
By James Wooten
N. Y. Times Service
WASHINGTON - The White House
took a defensive posture Friday as the
abrupt resignation of President Car-ter's
principal narcotics adviser
prompted a flood of inquiries about
drug use among members of the White
House staff.
Beseiged by questions on the subject
at his briefing for reporters, press
secretary Jody Powell said he was
unable to assess the accuracy of Dr.
Peter G. Bourne's assertion Thursday
that some members of the staff use
marijuana or cocaine.
Neverthless, several junior members
of the staff privately admitted Friday
that they do smoke marijuana
regularly during off- du- ty hours and
that they were directly and indirectly
aware of the use of cocaine by a few of
their colleagues.
All said they never had used
marijuana inside the White House and
Insight
each insisted that his " recreational"
use of the illegal drug never had im-paired
his ability to function in his
White House post
Bourne, who resigned Thursday after
acknowledging that he had written a
prescription for a fictitious person, had
suggested similar circumstances in an
interview. He said there was a " high
incidence" of marijuana use among
members of the White House staff as
well as the " occasional" use of cocaine
by " a few" of his former colleagues.
" I dont have any knowledge of this
and I have no way of knowing," Powell
said Friday, adding that the president
" very stringently discouraged" such
violations of the law by his employees
or by any citizen of the country.
In the District of Columbia,
possession of cocaine or marijuana is
deemed a misdemeanor, punishable by
a maximum fine of $ 1,000 and one year
in jaiL Further violations involving
either substance are subject to treat-ment
as felonies, with much stricter
penalties. In recent years, however,
Washington courts have been relatively
lenient in dealing with persons con-victed
of possession of marijuana.
Another high- ranki- ng confidant of
Cartejreiterated Powell's statement.
' Jimmy is very explicit on this," he
said. " If we find out that anyone I
mean, anyone is violating the law in
this way or in any other, they won't be
working for the White House anymore,
and that's for damned sure."
Both he and Powell were
unabashedly perturbed by the sudden
spate of interest in the possibility that
men and women who work for the
president also might also be using such
drugs, a curiosity spawned by the quick
departure of Bourne from the White
House staff.
The rush of reports, rumors and
gossip that accompanied his
resignation seemed to reflect a
heightened but troubled sensitivity to
the subject of drugs in Washington,
expressed in a variety of ways all
across the city, from the beleaguered
White House, to high- lev- el offices in the
executive branch, to Capitol Hill and to
( See DRUG, Page 11)
i
i - --. ..!
..-- -- iXr- LgTi
-.-
-.
sr-- --- ..-- v
.---
.-.:
rafflmSjH.. j'- o- . VX -- " " i i( H ;'. . .; v--- 1 . - ' tSBf ' v zSS& PSg& Bs
" ."- i- H"- .'' V"- -
H. 1IS1& W11B? & 1& F1MS
The Winn Brothers, holders of the world
record for the steepest highwire climb,
dazzled the crowd at the Boone County
Fairgrounds Friday night with an act in
which one of the two aerialist walks over
the other, who lays on the wire. The pair
are members of the Europorama
highwire company, which performed at
a benefit sponsored by the Columbia
Police Officers Association. See story,
Page 11.
H" H C A A J
By Mary Ann King
Missourian staff writer
What constitutes the " integrity" of Lions- Stephe- ns
Park?
Thursday night the Columbia Parks and
Recreation Commission unanimously passed a
resolution asking the City Council to preserve the
" integrity," or current city use, of the park.
Dick Green, city parks and recreation director,
reminded the commission it could not make
recommendations on the proposed rezoning to
commercial and multifamily uses of all 14.3 acres
( 5.7 hectares) within the 40- ac- re ( 16- hecta- re) park
area. He said the commission only could ask the
council to act on the acreage the city now main-tains
as a city park.
Exactly what that acreage is, and what its future
may be, is unclear. Although the city has main-tained
12 acres ( 4.8 hectares) of the total tract,
guesses by Green and Marion Henley, director of
buildings and grounds for Stephens, about how
much land the city actually leases vary from 3.5 to
5 acres ( 1.4 to 2 hectares). Comisssion member
Dan AtwiH said that Thursday night, when he voted
for the resolution, he thought he was speaking for
the protection of the full 12 acres ( 4.8 hectares).
Dick Tyler, another commission member, said
he was voting for the " five or six acres ( 2 or 2.4
hectares) in which most of our program goes on."
And Diane Farish, councilwoman for the Sixth
Ward in which the park lies, said the community
needs a " three- - to 12- ac- re ( 1.2-- to 4.8- hectar- e)
park." Columbians to Save Stephens Park, the
group formed to fight development of the whole 40- ac- re
( 16- hecta- re) area, would like to see the rolling
green tract of land retained in its entirety.
It generally is agreed that the land the city will
lose when Stephens exercises its 30- da- y option to
cancel the lease is bounded by Williams and Ann
Streets on the east and west, and Windsor and
Walnut Streets on the north and south. The rest of
the 40 acres ( 15 hectares) has been left as open
space by Stephens for public use, but has not been
maintained by the city.
Developers have their eye on redoing all but a
small comer of the 40 acres ( 16 hectares). Green
said the city can hope to negotiate with Stephens
and the developers for a three-- to five- acr- e ( 1.2-- to
2- hect- are) park, expanding on the haif- acr- e (. 2- hecta- re)
park provided in the preliminary plan for
the area by the developer, Joe Morrissey of
Clayton. " Regardless of the rezoning, we need a
neighborhood park there," said Green.
Green pointed out that other parks serving the
East Campus and Stephens area are limited.
Paquin Park, a two- acr- e (. 8- hecta- re) facility
behind Paquin Towers, primarily serves the
elderly and handicapped residents of the high- ris- e.
Cliff Drive Park is a scant half- acr- e (. 2- hectar- e),
and East Campus ( Rock Hill) Park is a natural
drainage area with trees and paths, but little open
( See PARK, Page 14)
WASHINGTON ( UPI) The nation's economy
grew during the spring at the fastest rate since
early 1976 7.4 percent but still lagged behind
administration expectations, the government
reported Friday.
The Commerce Department also reported that
inflation during the second quarter soared by 10
percent the largest jump since the January- Marc- h
period in 1975.
President Carter and his advisers had expected
economic growth during the April- Jun- e quarter to
rebound sharply from the dull winter months and
hit an annual rate of about nine percent.
White House Press Secretary Jody Powell said
Carter considered the new figures as. " relatively
good although somewhat less than we hoped for."
The inflation reading was " not good," Powell
said.
The slower- than- expect- ed second- quart- er in-crease
in the government's gross national product
statistics may force the administration to rethink
again its estimate for full- ye- ar economic growth,
officially projected at 4.1 percent
" I think 4.1 percent now looks too optimistic,"
said Commerce Secretary Juanita Kreps. " I would
not rule out absolutely the chance of a revision."
The administration predicted in January that
1978 growth would be 4.7 percent. Earlier this
month, it revised that figure to 4.1 percent.
Some private experts have predicted a passible
recession by the end of the year or in 1979 unless
inflation is brought under control.
The GNP is the total output of goods and services
produced in the United States, adjusted for in-flation,
and is considered the truest measurement
of the nation's economic strength.
The 7.4 percent GNP rise was a significant im-provement
over the first quarter, when there was a
0.1 percent decline. It was the strongest three- mont- h
period since 1976' s first- quart- er rise of 9.3
percent.
On the inflation front Mrs. Kreps repeated
administration projections that food prices, which
rose 17 percent during first half of 1978, should
abate, " producing a significantly lower overall
rate of inflation than we witnessed in the first
half."
Rescue attempt fails
Exhaustion apparently led to the
drowning of Dewey William Scott, 20,
Thursday afternoon at Finger Lakes
State Park.
Scott, reported to be a good swim-mer,
was in the water with Reno
Bentley, 21, of Mfllersburg. Bentley told
the Boone County Sheriffs Department
that he and Scott, 152 Crescent
Meadows Trailer Park, swam across a
lake at a point where it is about 50 feet
( 15 meters) across. Bentley said when
they reached the shore Scott said he
was exhausted and wanted to rest
before starting back.
Bentley said they had started
swimming back and had gotten halfway
across when Scott started yelling that
he -- could not make it Bentley said be
swam back to his friend and grabbed
his arm to hold him up.
Bentley told the sheriff he had pulled
Scott to within 20 feet ( 6 meters) of
shore when Scott told him that he could
make it the rest of the way. Bentley
said they swam five more feet ( 1.5
meters) when Scott again told him that
he was not going to make it
Bentley said that again he grabbed
Scott's arm, but Scott grabbed him and
pulled them both under. Bentley said
both men were yelling for help, but that
no one on shore came to then- assistanc- e.
Scott then pulled away and
sank before Bentley could grab him,
Bentley said.
The body was recovered early Friday
morning.
Scott attended Hickman High School
and was employed at the X- C- el Oil
Company at the time of his death.
Survivors include his mother, Ger-trude
C. Scott, 1801 W. Worley St. ; three
brothers, Stephen Scott, 3204 Northland
Drive, George H. Scott, 1801 W. Worley
St., and Ricky Scott, Sedalia; three
sisters, Dove Standage, Watervliet,
Mich., Mary Reynolds, Bald Knob,
Ark., and Phyllis Simpson, McKenzie,
Ark.
Services will be held at 10 a. m.
Monday at the Memorial Funeral Home
Chapel with the Rev. Dan Goddard of
the Seventh- Da- y Adventist Church
officiating. Burial will be in Memorial
Park Cemetery.
Friends may call after 1 p. m. today at
the funeral home.
Mm towi 1
toitay j
5: 30 and 9: 30 p. m. " Anything
Goes," Summer Dinner Theater,
Columbia College; 9: 30 show
does not include dinner.
7: 33 pjn. " The Taming of the
Shrew," Maplewood Barn
Theater, Nifong Park.
7: 3 p. m. " Feiffer's People,"
Maplewood Barn Theater,
Stephens College Warehouse
Theater.
8: 15 pjn. " Two Gentlemen of
Verona," Summer Repertory
Theater, University Theater.
Movie listings on Page 13 J
WASHINGTON ( UPI) U. S. and
Canadian authorities Friday sought
three suspected members of a West
German terrorist organization who are
believed to have crossed the border
between the two countries with
legitimate passports.
The three are wanted for questioning
by federal authorities after a fourth
person, West German fuguitive
Kristina Katherina Bcrster, 27, was
arrested by US. border guards near
Alburg, Vt, last Sunday carrying a
false Iranian passport. She had at-tempted
to slip past the border post but
was spotted and arrested.
The FBI believes two of her three
companions a man and a woman
later re- enter- ed the United States, a
source close to the investigation said.
A spokesman said the FBI had
established liason with Canadian
authorities in connection with the
search. " They know we're looking for
them," he said.
German justice authorities suspected
In the tradition of Alex Haley's iVESHp
" Roots," Sonia Sunoo is $ si 1& uBHR researching the history of Korean jrjga n WSSBBSm
immigration to America. In PWiKS I
Sunday's Vibrations, she relives iLL I
her own search for identity in an M-- j
two of the three wanted persons were
Dr. Wolfgang Huber, a founder of the
Socialist Patients' Collective, and Axel
Acbterratch. Both face various charges
in Germany connected with suspected
terrorist activities.
With passports that appear valid, the
source noted, they can enter and leave
the United States " of their own free
will."
The Socialist Patients Collective, in
Heidelberg, believes capitalism drives
people insane. It also is considered a
recruiting ground for the Baader- Meinh- of
gang, which has been
responsible for a series of deaths and
terrorist activities in West Germany
over the past few years.
German officials say the collective
holds that only the maladjusted can
survive in modern society, and the
insane are too sane to live under
present social conditions.
Miss Berster, whose arrest was not
disclosed until Thursday night after a
hearing before a federal judge in
In the morning of life the good Jd& B' fill fairy brought her basket of gifts. j5fflHL - -- i H
They were: Fame, Love, Riches, SSranf3& Pleasure and Death. " Choose iflmSm - jrssF iHi
wisely," she said. " For only one ' m .
" J& m
of them is valuable." Mark Twain MSggr '
finishes the story Sunday. fpraraL '
msm S
Burlington, Vt, was held in the Albany
County ( Vt.) jail on $ 500,000 bail on
charges of violating U. S. passport laws.
She will have a second hearing next
Friday.
In 1973, West German authorities
identified Miss Berster as a member of
the collective. She spent several
months in jail in 1973 awaiting trial on
charges of criminal conspiracy, illegal
use of explosives and counterfeiting
identity documents.
However, she was released without
standing trial and went underground.
She has been on West Germany's
wanted list since then.
Huber was convicted in 1972 of
membership in a criminal
organization, forgery of official
documents and making bombs, and was
sentenced to 4 years in prison. He
went underground after his release.
Achterrath is wanted on suspicion of
aiding the terrorist- - Baader- Memh- of
gang.
Columbian David Strauss has J rf ''' ? argued cases on both sides of the feia&!$ F
courtroom - for two- and- a- ha- lf RPSfflP years as an assistant prosecuting r ,? Jfi. 4. J
attorney, and now as Boone ' f s T" J County's Public Defender. ! WLtow, 4
Strauss discusses the similarities VIJFv J?" I
and differences between the two l Vsp3? sT 3
roles in Sunday's Missourian. i S4' i 3

STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
HITT & LOVfRY UT .
COLUMBIA, Ml. 652' Jl
ST. 12- 5-- 74 .
" See story, Page 6
70lli Year - No. 261 ;, Morning! It's Saturday July 22 1 978 14 Pages 1 5 Cents , -
Who uses
6pot, 9 6coke9
in capital?
Bourne episode has
people wondering
By James Wooten
N. Y. Times Service
WASHINGTON - The White House
took a defensive posture Friday as the
abrupt resignation of President Car-ter's
principal narcotics adviser
prompted a flood of inquiries about
drug use among members of the White
House staff.
Beseiged by questions on the subject
at his briefing for reporters, press
secretary Jody Powell said he was
unable to assess the accuracy of Dr.
Peter G. Bourne's assertion Thursday
that some members of the staff use
marijuana or cocaine.
Neverthless, several junior members
of the staff privately admitted Friday
that they do smoke marijuana
regularly during off- du- ty hours and
that they were directly and indirectly
aware of the use of cocaine by a few of
their colleagues.
All said they never had used
marijuana inside the White House and
Insight
each insisted that his " recreational"
use of the illegal drug never had im-paired
his ability to function in his
White House post
Bourne, who resigned Thursday after
acknowledging that he had written a
prescription for a fictitious person, had
suggested similar circumstances in an
interview. He said there was a " high
incidence" of marijuana use among
members of the White House staff as
well as the " occasional" use of cocaine
by " a few" of his former colleagues.
" I dont have any knowledge of this
and I have no way of knowing," Powell
said Friday, adding that the president
" very stringently discouraged" such
violations of the law by his employees
or by any citizen of the country.
In the District of Columbia,
possession of cocaine or marijuana is
deemed a misdemeanor, punishable by
a maximum fine of $ 1,000 and one year
in jaiL Further violations involving
either substance are subject to treat-ment
as felonies, with much stricter
penalties. In recent years, however,
Washington courts have been relatively
lenient in dealing with persons con-victed
of possession of marijuana.
Another high- ranki- ng confidant of
Cartejreiterated Powell's statement.
' Jimmy is very explicit on this," he
said. " If we find out that anyone I
mean, anyone is violating the law in
this way or in any other, they won't be
working for the White House anymore,
and that's for damned sure."
Both he and Powell were
unabashedly perturbed by the sudden
spate of interest in the possibility that
men and women who work for the
president also might also be using such
drugs, a curiosity spawned by the quick
departure of Bourne from the White
House staff.
The rush of reports, rumors and
gossip that accompanied his
resignation seemed to reflect a
heightened but troubled sensitivity to
the subject of drugs in Washington,
expressed in a variety of ways all
across the city, from the beleaguered
White House, to high- lev- el offices in the
executive branch, to Capitol Hill and to
( See DRUG, Page 11)
i
i - --. ..!
..-- -- iXr- LgTi
-.-
-.
sr-- --- ..-- v
.---
.-.:
rafflmSjH.. j'- o- . VX -- " " i i( H ;'. . .; v--- 1 . - ' tSBf ' v zSS& PSg& Bs
" ."- i- H"- .'' V"- -
H. 1IS1& W11B? & 1& F1MS
The Winn Brothers, holders of the world
record for the steepest highwire climb,
dazzled the crowd at the Boone County
Fairgrounds Friday night with an act in
which one of the two aerialist walks over
the other, who lays on the wire. The pair
are members of the Europorama
highwire company, which performed at
a benefit sponsored by the Columbia
Police Officers Association. See story,
Page 11.
H" H C A A J
By Mary Ann King
Missourian staff writer
What constitutes the " integrity" of Lions- Stephe- ns
Park?
Thursday night the Columbia Parks and
Recreation Commission unanimously passed a
resolution asking the City Council to preserve the
" integrity," or current city use, of the park.
Dick Green, city parks and recreation director,
reminded the commission it could not make
recommendations on the proposed rezoning to
commercial and multifamily uses of all 14.3 acres
( 5.7 hectares) within the 40- ac- re ( 16- hecta- re) park
area. He said the commission only could ask the
council to act on the acreage the city now main-tains
as a city park.
Exactly what that acreage is, and what its future
may be, is unclear. Although the city has main-tained
12 acres ( 4.8 hectares) of the total tract,
guesses by Green and Marion Henley, director of
buildings and grounds for Stephens, about how
much land the city actually leases vary from 3.5 to
5 acres ( 1.4 to 2 hectares). Comisssion member
Dan AtwiH said that Thursday night, when he voted
for the resolution, he thought he was speaking for
the protection of the full 12 acres ( 4.8 hectares).
Dick Tyler, another commission member, said
he was voting for the " five or six acres ( 2 or 2.4
hectares) in which most of our program goes on."
And Diane Farish, councilwoman for the Sixth
Ward in which the park lies, said the community
needs a " three- - to 12- ac- re ( 1.2-- to 4.8- hectar- e)
park." Columbians to Save Stephens Park, the
group formed to fight development of the whole 40- ac- re
( 16- hecta- re) area, would like to see the rolling
green tract of land retained in its entirety.
It generally is agreed that the land the city will
lose when Stephens exercises its 30- da- y option to
cancel the lease is bounded by Williams and Ann
Streets on the east and west, and Windsor and
Walnut Streets on the north and south. The rest of
the 40 acres ( 15 hectares) has been left as open
space by Stephens for public use, but has not been
maintained by the city.
Developers have their eye on redoing all but a
small comer of the 40 acres ( 16 hectares). Green
said the city can hope to negotiate with Stephens
and the developers for a three-- to five- acr- e ( 1.2-- to
2- hect- are) park, expanding on the haif- acr- e (. 2- hecta- re)
park provided in the preliminary plan for
the area by the developer, Joe Morrissey of
Clayton. " Regardless of the rezoning, we need a
neighborhood park there," said Green.
Green pointed out that other parks serving the
East Campus and Stephens area are limited.
Paquin Park, a two- acr- e (. 8- hecta- re) facility
behind Paquin Towers, primarily serves the
elderly and handicapped residents of the high- ris- e.
Cliff Drive Park is a scant half- acr- e (. 2- hectar- e),
and East Campus ( Rock Hill) Park is a natural
drainage area with trees and paths, but little open
( See PARK, Page 14)
WASHINGTON ( UPI) The nation's economy
grew during the spring at the fastest rate since
early 1976 7.4 percent but still lagged behind
administration expectations, the government
reported Friday.
The Commerce Department also reported that
inflation during the second quarter soared by 10
percent the largest jump since the January- Marc- h
period in 1975.
President Carter and his advisers had expected
economic growth during the April- Jun- e quarter to
rebound sharply from the dull winter months and
hit an annual rate of about nine percent.
White House Press Secretary Jody Powell said
Carter considered the new figures as. " relatively
good although somewhat less than we hoped for."
The inflation reading was " not good," Powell
said.
The slower- than- expect- ed second- quart- er in-crease
in the government's gross national product
statistics may force the administration to rethink
again its estimate for full- ye- ar economic growth,
officially projected at 4.1 percent
" I think 4.1 percent now looks too optimistic,"
said Commerce Secretary Juanita Kreps. " I would
not rule out absolutely the chance of a revision."
The administration predicted in January that
1978 growth would be 4.7 percent. Earlier this
month, it revised that figure to 4.1 percent.
Some private experts have predicted a passible
recession by the end of the year or in 1979 unless
inflation is brought under control.
The GNP is the total output of goods and services
produced in the United States, adjusted for in-flation,
and is considered the truest measurement
of the nation's economic strength.
The 7.4 percent GNP rise was a significant im-provement
over the first quarter, when there was a
0.1 percent decline. It was the strongest three- mont- h
period since 1976' s first- quart- er rise of 9.3
percent.
On the inflation front Mrs. Kreps repeated
administration projections that food prices, which
rose 17 percent during first half of 1978, should
abate, " producing a significantly lower overall
rate of inflation than we witnessed in the first
half."
Rescue attempt fails
Exhaustion apparently led to the
drowning of Dewey William Scott, 20,
Thursday afternoon at Finger Lakes
State Park.
Scott, reported to be a good swim-mer,
was in the water with Reno
Bentley, 21, of Mfllersburg. Bentley told
the Boone County Sheriffs Department
that he and Scott, 152 Crescent
Meadows Trailer Park, swam across a
lake at a point where it is about 50 feet
( 15 meters) across. Bentley said when
they reached the shore Scott said he
was exhausted and wanted to rest
before starting back.
Bentley said they had started
swimming back and had gotten halfway
across when Scott started yelling that
he -- could not make it Bentley said be
swam back to his friend and grabbed
his arm to hold him up.
Bentley told the sheriff he had pulled
Scott to within 20 feet ( 6 meters) of
shore when Scott told him that he could
make it the rest of the way. Bentley
said they swam five more feet ( 1.5
meters) when Scott again told him that
he was not going to make it
Bentley said that again he grabbed
Scott's arm, but Scott grabbed him and
pulled them both under. Bentley said
both men were yelling for help, but that
no one on shore came to then- assistanc- e.
Scott then pulled away and
sank before Bentley could grab him,
Bentley said.
The body was recovered early Friday
morning.
Scott attended Hickman High School
and was employed at the X- C- el Oil
Company at the time of his death.
Survivors include his mother, Ger-trude
C. Scott, 1801 W. Worley St. ; three
brothers, Stephen Scott, 3204 Northland
Drive, George H. Scott, 1801 W. Worley
St., and Ricky Scott, Sedalia; three
sisters, Dove Standage, Watervliet,
Mich., Mary Reynolds, Bald Knob,
Ark., and Phyllis Simpson, McKenzie,
Ark.
Services will be held at 10 a. m.
Monday at the Memorial Funeral Home
Chapel with the Rev. Dan Goddard of
the Seventh- Da- y Adventist Church
officiating. Burial will be in Memorial
Park Cemetery.
Friends may call after 1 p. m. today at
the funeral home.
Mm towi 1
toitay j
5: 30 and 9: 30 p. m. " Anything
Goes," Summer Dinner Theater,
Columbia College; 9: 30 show
does not include dinner.
7: 33 pjn. " The Taming of the
Shrew," Maplewood Barn
Theater, Nifong Park.
7: 3 p. m. " Feiffer's People,"
Maplewood Barn Theater,
Stephens College Warehouse
Theater.
8: 15 pjn. " Two Gentlemen of
Verona," Summer Repertory
Theater, University Theater.
Movie listings on Page 13 J
WASHINGTON ( UPI) U. S. and
Canadian authorities Friday sought
three suspected members of a West
German terrorist organization who are
believed to have crossed the border
between the two countries with
legitimate passports.
The three are wanted for questioning
by federal authorities after a fourth
person, West German fuguitive
Kristina Katherina Bcrster, 27, was
arrested by US. border guards near
Alburg, Vt, last Sunday carrying a
false Iranian passport. She had at-tempted
to slip past the border post but
was spotted and arrested.
The FBI believes two of her three
companions a man and a woman
later re- enter- ed the United States, a
source close to the investigation said.
A spokesman said the FBI had
established liason with Canadian
authorities in connection with the
search. " They know we're looking for
them," he said.
German justice authorities suspected
In the tradition of Alex Haley's iVESHp
" Roots," Sonia Sunoo is $ si 1& uBHR researching the history of Korean jrjga n WSSBBSm
immigration to America. In PWiKS I
Sunday's Vibrations, she relives iLL I
her own search for identity in an M-- j
two of the three wanted persons were
Dr. Wolfgang Huber, a founder of the
Socialist Patients' Collective, and Axel
Acbterratch. Both face various charges
in Germany connected with suspected
terrorist activities.
With passports that appear valid, the
source noted, they can enter and leave
the United States " of their own free
will."
The Socialist Patients Collective, in
Heidelberg, believes capitalism drives
people insane. It also is considered a
recruiting ground for the Baader- Meinh- of
gang, which has been
responsible for a series of deaths and
terrorist activities in West Germany
over the past few years.
German officials say the collective
holds that only the maladjusted can
survive in modern society, and the
insane are too sane to live under
present social conditions.
Miss Berster, whose arrest was not
disclosed until Thursday night after a
hearing before a federal judge in
In the morning of life the good Jd& B' fill fairy brought her basket of gifts. j5fflHL - -- i H
They were: Fame, Love, Riches, SSranf3& Pleasure and Death. " Choose iflmSm - jrssF iHi
wisely," she said. " For only one ' m .
" J& m
of them is valuable." Mark Twain MSggr '
finishes the story Sunday. fpraraL '
msm S
Burlington, Vt, was held in the Albany
County ( Vt.) jail on $ 500,000 bail on
charges of violating U. S. passport laws.
She will have a second hearing next
Friday.
In 1973, West German authorities
identified Miss Berster as a member of
the collective. She spent several
months in jail in 1973 awaiting trial on
charges of criminal conspiracy, illegal
use of explosives and counterfeiting
identity documents.
However, she was released without
standing trial and went underground.
She has been on West Germany's
wanted list since then.
Huber was convicted in 1972 of
membership in a criminal
organization, forgery of official
documents and making bombs, and was
sentenced to 4 years in prison. He
went underground after his release.
Achterrath is wanted on suspicion of
aiding the terrorist- - Baader- Memh- of
gang.
Columbian David Strauss has J rf ''' ? argued cases on both sides of the feia&!$ F
courtroom - for two- and- a- ha- lf RPSfflP years as an assistant prosecuting r ,? Jfi. 4. J
attorney, and now as Boone ' f s T" J County's Public Defender. ! WLtow, 4
Strauss discusses the similarities VIJFv J?" I
and differences between the two l Vsp3? sT 3
roles in Sunday's Missourian. i S4' i 3